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On my previous blog post about installing ELK stack without sudo access one of the commentator asked me about explaining the Logstash config in more detail. For ease of reference the Logstash config is reproduced below: input { redis { host => "127.

Recently, on my blog post on installing ELK stack on Ubuntu/Debian I was asked if it was possible to have ELK stack running on a server without sudo access. I admit it's a question that got me curious. The

We have some stats being calculated and logged in our logs and we wanted to plot graphs via our already running Graphite service. There are two ways to approach this issue. You can directly send statistics via graphite library for

Once you have the ELK stack installed, you can then ship/forward your logs to the redis database on the ELK stack. Once your logs are on the redis database, the logstash on the ELK server will read from it

How to install ELK and configure it on your server (Ubuntu/Debian)? You can follow the steps below to install and configure Elasticsearch-Logstash-Kibana (ELK) stack on Ubuntu/Debian server. If you are familiar with ansible, you can also find below

Problem statement: You have different applications feeding into each other. Debugging an issue requires logging into each individual box to look at the logs. With small number of apps/boxes it's not an issue, but it quickly becomes tedious as